"If you are not a
millionaire, you are most certainly drunk."
"Drunk with power. I can kill you!--Silence! I am Nero! I am
Nebuchadnezzar!"
"But, Raphael, we are in queer company, and you ought to keep quiet
for the sake of your own dignity."
"My life has been silent too long. I mean to have my
revenge now on
the world at large. I will not amuse myself by squandering paltry
five-franc pieces; I will
reproduce and sum up my epoch by absorbing
human lives, human minds, and human souls. There are the treasures of
pestilence--that is no paltry kind of
wealth, is it? I will wrestle
with fevers--yellow, blue, or green--with whole armies, with gibbets.
I can possess Foedora--Yet no, I do not want Foedora; she is a
disease; I am dying of Foedora. I want to forget Foedora."
"If you keep on
calling out like this, I shall take you into the
dining-room."
"Do you see this skin? It is Solomon's will. Solomon belongs to me--a
little varlet of a king! Arabia is mine, Arabia Petraea to boot; and
the
universe, and you too, if I choose. If I choose-- Ah! be careful.
I can buy up all our journalist's shop; you shall be my valet. You
shall be my valet, you shall manage my newspaper. Valet! VALET, that
is to say, free from aches and pains, because he has no brains."
At the word, Emile carried Raphael off into the dining-room.
"All right," he remarked; "yes, my friend, I am your valet. But you
are about to be editor-in-chief of a newspaper; so be quiet, and
behave
properly, for my sake. Have you no regard for me?"
"Regard for you! You shall have Havana cigars, with this bit of
shagreen: always with this skin, this
supreme bit of shagreen. It is a
cure for corns, and efficacious
remedy. Do you suffer? I will remove
them."
"Never have I known you so senseless----"
"Senseless, my friend? Not at all. This skin contracts
whenever I form
a wish--'tis a paradox. There is a Brahmin
underneath it! The Brahmin
must be a droll fellow, for our desires, look you, are bound to
expand----"
"Yes, yes----"
"I tell you----"
"Yes, yes, very true, I am quite of your opinion--our desires
expand----"
"The skin, I tell you."
"Yes."
"You don't believe me. I know you, my friend; you are as full of lies
as a new-made king."
"How can you expect me to follow your
drunken maunderings?"
"I will bet you I can prove it. Let us
measure it----"
"Goodness! he will never get off to sleep," exclaimed Emile, as he
watched Raphael rummaging
busily in the dining-room.
Thanks to the
peculiarclearness with which
external objects are
sometimes projected on an inebriated brain, in sharp
contrast to its
own obscure imaginings, Valentin found an inkstand and a table-napkin,
with the quickness of a
monkey, repeating all the time:
"Let us
measure it! Let us
measure it!"
"All right," said Emile; "let us
measure it!"
The two friends spread out the table-napkin and laid the Magic Skin
upon it. As Emile's hand appeared to be steadier than Raphael's, he
drew a line with pen and ink round the talisman, while his friend
said:
"I wished for an
income of two hundred thousand livres, didn't I?
Well, when that comes, you will observe a
mighty diminution of my
chagrin."
"Yes--now go to sleep. Shall I make you comfortable on that sofa? Now
then, are you all right?"
"Yes, my nursling of the press. You shall amuse me; you shall drive
the flies away from me. The friend of
adversity should be the friend
of
prosperity. So I will give you some Hava--na--cig----"
"Come, now, sleep. Sleep off your gold, you
millionaire!"
"You! sleep off your paragraphs! Good-night! Say good-night to
Nebuchadnezzar!--Love! Wine! France!--glory and tr--treas----"
Very soon the snorings of the two friends were added to the music with
which the rooms resounded--an ineffectual concert! The lights went out
one by one, their
crystal sconces cracking in the final flare. Night
threw dark shadows over this prolonged revelry, in which Raphael's
narrative had been a second orgy of speech, of words without ideas, of
ideas for which words had often been lacking.
Towards noon, next day, the fair Aquilina bestirred herself. She
yawned
wearily. She had slept with her head upon a painted velvet
footstool, and her cheeks were mottled over by
contact with the
surface. Her
movement awoke Euphrasia, who suddenly
sprang up with a
hoarse cry; her pretty face, that had been so fresh and fair in the
evening, was sallow now and pallid; she looked like a
candidate for
the hospital. The rest awoke also by degrees, with portentous
groanings, to feel themselves over in every stiffened limb, and to
experience the
infinite varieties of
weariness that weighed upon them.
A servant came in to throw back the shutters and open the windows.
There they all stood, brought back to
consciousness by the warm rays
of
sunlight that shone upon the sleepers' heads. Their
movements
during
slumber had
disordered the elaborately arranged hair and
toilettes of the women. They presented a
ghastlyspectacle in the
bright
daylight. Their hair fell un
gracefully about them; their eyes,
lately so
brilliant, were heavy and dim; the expression of their faces
was entirely changed. The
sickly hues, which
daylight brings out so
strongly, were
frightful. An olive tint had crept over the lymphatic
faces, so fair and soft when in
repose; the
dainty red lips were grown
pale and dry, and bore tokens of the
degradation of
excess. Each
disowned his
mistress of the night before; the women looked wan and
discolored, like flowers trampled under foot by a passing procession.
The men who scorned them looked even more
horrible. Those human faces
would have made you
shudder. The hollow eyes with the dark circles
round them seemed to see nothing; they were dull with wine and
stupefied with heavy
slumbers that had been exhausting rather than
refreshing. There was an
indescribableferocious and stolid bestiality
about these
haggard faces, where bare
physicalappetite appeared shorn
of all the
poeticalillusion with which the
intellect invests it. Even
these
fearless champions, accustomed to
measure themselves with
excess, were struck with
horror at this
awakening of vice, stripped of
its disguises, at being confronted thus with sin, the
skeleton in
rags,
lifeless and hollow,
bereft of the sophistries of the
intellectand the enchantments of
luxury. Artists and courtesans scrutinized in
silence and with
haggard glances the
surroundingdisorder, the rooms
where everything had been laid waste, at the havoc
wrought by heated
passions.
Demoniac
laughter broke out when Taillefer, catching the smothered
murmurs of his guests, tried to greet them with a grin. His darkly
flushed, perspiring
countenance loomed upon this pandemonium, like the
image of a crime that knows no
remorse (see L'Auberge Rouge). The
picture was complete. A picture of a foul life in the midst of
luxury,
a
hideousmixture of the pomp and squalor of
humanity; an
awakeningafter the
frenzy of Debauch has crushed and squeezed all the fruits of
life in her strong hands, till nothing but unsightly refuse is left to
her, and lies in which she believes no longer. You might have thought
of Death gloating over a family
stricken with the plague.
The sweet scents and dazzling lights, the mirth and the excitement
were all no more;
disgust with its nauseous sensations and searching
philosophy was there instead. The sun shone in like truth, the pure
outer air was like
virtue; in
contrast with the heated atmosphere,
heavy with the fumes of the
previous night of revelry.
Accustomed as they were to their life, many of the girls thought of
other days and other wakings; pure and
innocent days when they looked
out and saw the roses and
honeysuckle about the
casement, and the
fresh
countryside without enraptured by the glad music of the skylark;
while earth lay in mists, lighted by the dawn, and in all the
glittering
radiance of dew. Others imagined the family breakfast, the
father and children round the table, the
innocentlaughter, the
unspeakable charm that pervaded it all, the simple hearts and their
meal as simple.
An artist mused upon his quiet
studio, on his
statue in its severe
beauty, and the
graceful model who was
waiting for him. A young man
recollected a lawsuit on which the fortunes of a family hung, and an
important transaction that needed his presence. The
scholar regretted
his study and that noble work that called for him. Emile appeared just